Hinata Miyazawa had never been prolific for club or country before the FIFA Women’s World Cup — now she is the tournament’s leading scorer and spearheading Japan’s surprise title charge.
The 23-year-old already has five goals in four matches and has Sweden in her sights in tomorrow’s quarter-final in Auckland, New Zealand.
“I honestly didn’t think I could score this much,” Miyazawa told reporters after her ice-cold finish in the 81st minute polished off Norway in the last 16.
Photo: AP
It was typical of how Miyazawa, who plays in Japan’s domestic women’s league, has been at the World Cup: cool, calculating and deadly.
It is also noticeable that she has scored with both feet, and rather than trying to smack the ball into the net, it is all about precision and placement.
Expectations were low at home ahead of the tournament that Japan could repeat their World Cup title success of 2011.
Miyazawa had only scored four times in more than 20 appearances for her country, but Japan are playing some of the best soccer at the World Cup, and Miyazawa’s five goals equal the number that Homare Sawa achieved in the 2011 title success.
Miyazawa’s goal haul is all the more surprising because she has scored only four times in 39 appearances for her club MyNavi Sendai over the past two seasons.
Miyazawa is often described as a midfielder, but Dan Orlowitz, a sports writer for the Japan Times, said Japan coach Futoshi Ikeda has found a way to get goals out of her thanks to a 3-4-3 system that enables his team to be deadly on the break.
Miyazawa’s goals have mainly come from her running at speed from deep.
“It’s because of how Japan is so well organized at the back that they are able to set her up,” Orlowitz said. “It’s a system that suits her abilities, and her abilities suit the system.”
It was Japan’s 4-0 thumping of Spain in the group phase that really made the rest of the World Cup sit up and take notice. Miyazawa scored twice, once with each foot.
“She has speed and is also a good finisher and adept at counter-attacking,” Japanese soccer commentator Sergio Echigo said.
“She is also very calm and doesn’t panic right before she is about to score a goal,” he added.
Born in Kanagawa Prefecture outside Yokohama, Miyazawa fell in love with soccer at kindergarten, and in school was inspired by Japan’s 2011 World Cup win.
Miyazawa joined Tokyo Verdy Beleza in 2018. The same year she helped Japan win the FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup and was selected for the senior team.
Echigo said that Japan do not really have a standout star, but in Miyazawa, he sees a possible contender.
“I hope we’ll see a hero emerge from the World Cup this time,” Echigo said.
Champagne corks often pop and loud, boisterous cheers are usually heard around Constitution Dock when the Sydney Hobart Yacht Race line honors winner finishes in the Tasmanian state capital. There were no such celebrations this year when the defending champions on board LawConnect won the race in the early hours of yesterday morning, as it came about 24 hours after two sailors died on separate boats in sail boom accidents two hours apart on a storm-ravaged first night of the race. LawConnect, a 100-foot super maxi skippered by Australian tech millionaire Christian Beck, sailed up the River Derwent at just after 2:30am.
Elena Rybakina’s Kazakhstan yesterday dumped defending champions Germany out of the United Cup with world No. 2 Alexander Zverev sidelined by an arm injury barely a week away from the Australian Open. The upset in Perth sent the Kazakhs into the semi-finals of the 18-nation tournament. In Sydney, women’s world No. 2 Iga Swiatek led Poland into the last eight by winning a rematch of her 2023 French Open final against Karolina Muchova of the Czech Republic. Britain also progressed to the quarter-finals with Katie Boulter’s dominant 6-2, 6-1 victory over Australia’s Olivia Gadecki enough to guarantee they won their group. The US and
HAT-TRICK PREP: World No. 1 Sabalenka clinched her first win of the season, as she aims to become the first woman in 20 years to win three Australian Opens in succession Coco Gauff, Jasmine Paolini and Taylor Fritz yesterday all clocked impressive wins as tennis powerhouses Italy and the US surged into the quarter-finals of the mixed-team United Cup. World No. 3 Gauff swept past Croatia’s Donna Vekic 6-4, 6-2 to avenge a loss at the Paris Olympics, while Fritz took care of Borna Coric 6-3, 6-2 in searing Perth heat. That was enough to put the Americans — last year’s winners — into a last-eight clash with China today, while Elena Rybakina’s Kazakhstan today are to meet defending champions Germany, led by Alexander Zverev, in the other Perth quarter-final. In Sydney, the in-form
Chess great Magnus Carlsen on Friday quit the World Rapid and Blitz Chess Championships in New York after governing body FIDE barred the Norwegian from participating in a round at the tournament for wearing jeans. FIDE said in a statement that its dress code regulations were designed to “ensure professionalism and fairness for all participants.” It issued Carlsen a US$200 fine and gave him an opportunity to change into the correct attire, which the world No. 1 rejected, it said. Carlsen said he had a lunch meeting before the round and had to change quickly. “I put on a shirt, jacket and honestly like